Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / July 11, 1868, edition 1 / Page 2
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express the hope tliat in the selection by the Convention of a candidate for the I’reeideiicy, whose duty it will be, if elec ted, to preserve, protect, and defend the THE PLATFORM. We publiikh oa our first page to day the plattorrn adopted by the Na- Constitution, and to execute the laws tioiiul Hornocratic and Gonservative mada in pursanco of its provisions the Convention which hasinst concluded public good, and leading and well defined m. . a principles will not be sacrificed to the [ ^ This docir mere purpose of party ascendency. In conclusion, gentlemen, permit me to thank you most earnestly for the kind ex pression of your abiding confidence in me as a public servant, and to assure you that tlie approval ot the people ja all that is requisite to make me feel that the efforts I hare made to restore the Union on the fiasis of justice and conciliation have not been altogether in vain. Leaving my cause and myself In their hands, should the continuance and the conclusion of the contest to vindicate and preserve consti tutional government be confided by them to abler and more worthy hunda, I shall cordially acquiesce, as has been my hab it, in the decision of tlie American people. I hare the honor to be, gentlemen, Very respectfully, yours, Aniikpw Johnson. 'I'o Messrs. F. W. Coggill, James Gal latin, Thomas Morrell, Robert II. lierdell, Win. II. Appleton, J. W. Gerard, Jr., Henry Giinnell, Francis Skiddy, N. A. Baldwin, Emil Sauer, Isew York city. Slate SALISBURY, X. C., JULY 11, 1S68. ment has been looked for with intense present number, those on the History of Writing, on Sleep, and on liOuis IX. of France (Saint Louis), will be acceptable to all classes of readers. The first named article give an account of fac-similes of national manuscripts lately published by authority in Egland, and is full of anti- 'll F ir: PRESIDENT: OF NEW yORK. FOR VICE PRESIDENT; Gl. MK P. BtMR, OF illfiSOFPJ. ECONOMY IN THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE OOVEIiN.MENT; THE REDUCTION OF THE STANDINC ARMY AND NAVY: THE ABO- I.ITION OF THE FllEF.DMF.N’R BUREAU, & ALL rOLITlCAL INSTRUMENTALITIES DESKINED TO SECURE NIKIRO SURREMA- CY. DniiociuTio Platform. IT IS NOT A MERE PARTY TPIUMPII NYE SEEK, M'E ARE TRA'INO To SAt'E OUR COTNTRY l'R(»M TIIK DANMiKRS M'lHCH 0- VERHANU IT. (m 0:ym(>v,k’s Address. TIIK XOMIXATIOXS. AVc raise to oiir mast head with pleasure to day the names of Horatio t^EVMouR of New York, and Gen. Frank 1*. Hlaih of Missonri, as the X'ational Demoeratie and Conserva tive nominees for the Presidency and Vice Presidency of the United States. Tlieso are nominations emincntlv fit to be made — Gov, Sevu'.our has lonDf since established a national repiitas tion as one ol tlie ablest statesmen of this country. His character is* in every respect above reproach. lie lias always been a Democrat of the Jackson school, ami as such sustained tlie government in the late war for the preservation of the government and the restoration of the Union un der the Constitution, being what is known as “a war Democrat.” He now insists that the solemn pledges of tlic government, made through Ex ecutive proclamations and the nnani- mous resolves of Congress, that the war was to be waged for those pnrs poses only, shall be carried out. The Southern ])i ople desire nothing more. Gen. Hlair was forme ally a Re publican, and as such supported Mr. Lincoln for the I^rcsidency. He was an otHcer id* the federal army and fonglit gallant!V in the lute the restoration of tlie since tiie Reimhlicaa party lias vio kind, and the paper on Louis IX. is one of marked biographical and historical in terest. Other articles are—Mistral’s Mi- reio (a review, with many extracts, of a very pleasing Provencal poem), the Greek Idyllic Poets, Memoirs of Baron Bunsen, Schools and Universities, Churches and Creeds. He must be hard to please who finds this number dull reading. anxiety and will be read with deep in-! ^“arian information of the most readable terest all over the country. Ordinaris ly platforms do not amount to much, and are usually so framed as to ad mit of d fferent constructions, to suit all the various shades of opinion which divide the parties which adopt them. This may, with truth, be said ot most of the political platforms heretofore adopted by ail the various parties iii this country, but this one is not liable to that objection. They are generally too prolix, and tiiis may be urged against the present one. We think the best and most appropriate platform ever adopted by any party in th's country, as an expression of its principles and objects, was that adopt ed by the Union Convention which nominated Boll and Everett in 1860 —“The Constitution, the Union and enforcement of the Laws.” The pres ent one, we think could have been much in.proved by studying greater brevity and confining itself more closely to the present practical iss sues which agitate the country. But where tlie material and practical por tions of a platform are such as meet with our approval we would not withhold our co-operation with the party making it because we could not approve of and assent to all of those jiarts which are merely speculative. As we understand it we approve of all tliose parts of the present platform which relate to the practical questions now at issue, and vvitli many of the other portions of it. The preamble we regard as eminently appropriate, and we cannot see how any conservative man can object to any thing which it contains. All conservative men claim, with this platform, that “the Consti-' tution is the foundation of and limi tation of the powers of the Govern ment.” All of them, with it, lecog- nize the fact that “the questions of slavery and secession have been sets tied for all time to come by the war, or the voluntarily action of the South ern States in Constitutional Convens tions assembled, never to be renewed or re agitated,” and to no part of the platform will the Sontherii people subscribe more heartily than this. Having made these declarations the Directors of the North Carolina Rail Road.—Gov. Holden has appoint ed the following Directors of the North Carolina Railroad: \Vm. A. Smith, of Johnston ; Wm. Sloan, of Mecklenburg* O • W. F. Henderson, of Davidson; John McDonald, of Cabarras ; G. W. Welker, of Guilford ; Willie D. Jones, of Wake; Silas Burns, of Chatham ; John R. Har rison, oF^Wake; Byron Lafiin, of Pitt, State Proxy. We take the following proceedings of the meeting of the Stockholders on Thurs day, from the Raleigh Sentinel: North Carolina Hailroad.—The annupl meeting of Stockholders of this Road was held in Tucker Hall, on yesterday. On motion of John L. Morehead, Esq., Geo. W. Mordecai, Esq., was called to the Chair, and Messrs. F. G. Stagg and R. F. Simonton appointed Secretaries. A qaorum of stock not appearing, the meeting adjourned until 3 o’clock, P. M. Three O'cloclc.—A quorum of stock was present, viz : 6,458 shares, in person and by proxy. On motion of l^Ir. W. F. Henderson, the temporary officers, appointed in the morning, w ere made permanent. Mr. Byron Lafiin presented his creden tials as State proxy. The President read his report, and a lengthy and excited discussion ensued up on the question of its reception, the State Proxy objecting to certain alleged offen sive for “disloyal) expressions in it. Mr. Turner replied in a scathing and pungent speech. Finally, all the reports were referred to a Committee of three, viz: Messrs. K. P. Battle, John T. Shaver and Geo. French. Jileeting adjourned until 8 o’clock, P. M. We learn from a private source that D. A. Davis, John L. Morehead, W. A Caldwell and Thomas Webb were elected Directors by the stockholders; also that at a meeting of the directors, Wm, A. Smith, of Johnson county, w'as elected Southern Shoe Factory ! Shelly Brothen^ it Co., THOMASYILLE, N. C. H Important to Tobacco Growers.— Tbe following in relation to a new method of destroying the tobacco worm has been banded to ns by a gentleman connected with the tobacco trade, with the request kbat it should be published: Mr. William woore, an old tobacco raiser ©f Dyer eounty, informs me that if yon plant a few Jamestown weeds in your tobacco fields and sweeten with good sugar one pint of water, and then put once of Cobalt into the water and then drop four drops of the mixture into the bloom of the Jamestown weed, you can dill every to bacco fly on your place ere they hatch the worms. By destroying this pestiferous fly you can raise your tobacco crop with one-tenth the labor and attention now re quired.—Lynch. News. plattbnn then demands that all the j of the Road, Lee, Ireas- States shall bo immediately restored | to their rights in the Union under the to the practical issues between the two parties, and to an arraignment of the party in power for its abuses. We think the omission of those parts was wise, as since the abandonment Constitution and be remitted at once to civil government; an amnesty for all past political offenses and the reg Illation ot the elective franchise in the States by their citizens; the pay ment of the public debt of the Uni ted States as soon as practicable ; the honest application of all monies drawn from the people by taxation to that purpose except so much as may be requisite for the necessities of the government economically adminis tered, and tliat when the obligations of the government do not expressly sfate otherwise upon their face they be paid in the lawful money of the United States. To all of this we most heartily subscribe. Since the foregoing, together witli the platform, was in type we have received tlie National iRtelligencer of the 9th which contains a corrected copy of the platform, in which the merely speculative portions in rela> tion to the theory of the government are oraited. The platform as finally adopted, though prolix, confines itself Orders No. 84, of May Joth, looo, from these Headquarters : Atlantic and North Carolina Hailroad.— From the 'Wilmington Journal. CANBY'S LAST ACT OF TYR ANNY. General Canby signalized the ter mination of his career as Military Commander of this District by issu ing an order annulling the appoint ment of directors and proxies by Governor Worth in the State Rail roads and Canal. As these appoint ments were made at the usual time, and the day of meeting of the Stock holders of one of ihe roads, Atlantic and North Carolina, had passed, they are all legitimate, and as the order was issued upon Bie day North Caro lina ratified the HowarclAmendment, even admitting Canby^’s riglit to in terfere at any time, it is very proba ble that it no longer existed. Here is the order : Headq’rs 2nd Military District, Charleston. S. C.. July 2,1868 General Orders, ) No. 125. I The following appointments of directors and proxies for railroads on the part of the State of North Harolina. made by his Excel lency Jonathan Worth, late Provisonal Governor of North Carolina, on the 30th. June, ultimo, are hereby disapproved and annulled, as in violation of the spirit and :t, ) Ebv. Babnas Sears, D. D., agent of the Peabody Educational Fund, in an ad dress in Boston, on Monday evening, gave the result of his observations in the South. He thought that both sections of the coun try misunderstood and misinterpreted each other ; that the work of politicians, both in the North and in the South, is pemi- cions, and that what the Southern States really need is the hearty co-operation of the business men of the North to afford them capital to-vitalize their energies.— Tbe Southern men look with distrust to the military and to those connected with the Bureau, but men from the North with average civility and good sense are cor dially received among them. As to the matter of negro suffrage, the white popu lation, as a rule, are opposed to it—at least to universal suffrage. He thought, however, they would willingly agree to gome method of impartial suffrage, which would work advantageously for both i ^ T>* I. J nn.- *' penodic-al under the title ul TUL CAROLINA races.—Bichmond Whig. - DR. BASON, DENTIST. Office : Corner of Innis and Chnrch stirs TEETH, extracted and nerves destroyed without paia. Artificial Teetu. on short notice. A S SUCCESSORS of J. Shelly & Son—es- ! , family Srwing Ma- AY tablished in IScO—We are manufacturinf' m the L. b. Every faimly should hav« Men’s Bovs, Women's, Misses and Children’s Call and see them, pegged Shoes of the best quality and at prices _ wif-trw 2w to suit the times. | Z ~ i Oar Shoes are rarde of good materials and i Cd,t)^W03i warranted to have no shoddy in them. j Particular attention paid to orders. Send : Y SppiU^S for price list. may 7 twiw.3m THe CAROLIN.t FARMER. CATAWBA I'OIXTT, !S. C. BELIEVING that the interests of the Far-,^l'UlS Celebrated WATERING PLACE mers and Planters of this section demand the ± will be open for visitors from June 1st to publication of a periodical to be devoted to the December Dl advancement of Agriculture in the two Caroli- ^ xhe medical properties of the waters, both Sulphur and Calybeate, unrivalled. Accommo- FARMEK, and will issue the first number as unsurpassed, and a healthier and more soon as a sulficient number of subscribers are Qt*‘’yhl'>jl place not to be Dmud. obtained to pay a reasonable share of the ex- | Proprietor Las gone to great expense to pense ef publication. i improve and beautify the Springs, with an eye The Farmer will be issued monthly at ^2 per to the comfort of his guests, ai.d promises ev- annum. in advance ; will contain not less than ery thing will be done to add to the pleasure thirt}-two large double-column pages of read- of’all who mav honor him with a vi-^it ing matter, bound in handsome covers: and in j Take the Western X. C. liailroad at Salis- typographical execution ^1 not be surpassed : ^orv. either on Monday, Wt-dnes^iav or Fndav by any Agneultural Monthly in the country. ^ Being deteruiined to do whatever energy'will _ ; • * bry^.-tation, w neie you wnl accomplish in making the Farmer worthy the . JlacKS lor the S'pnngs, a oistanL-e ol six support of the intelligent Planters and Farmers over a beauii.ul, well shaded road, of North Carolina and South Carolina ; and de- i good band ot Mt sic will »>e at the Springs siring to introduce it into every county in those 1 the entire season.—Board per mouth; $13 States, we wi«;h to employ active Agents at ' per week or $3 per day. Ci.ildren under ten every Post office, to whom the most liberal in- \*ears of age, and servants, hail' price. Bath I houses complete for pool, piur.ge. sho.ver or tub baths, and sulphur baths, cold or hot. J. Gulden wyatt. . During the rebellion, Gen. Van Dorn, of the rebel army, was killed at Nashville by Dr. Peters for an alleged insult to his wife. The affair cast a gloom over the lyhole family of Dr. Peters, although he was justified by law. Dr. Peters, became a strict church member, and received his wife back, but never recovered from the gloom that overshadowed his life. A short time ago his son committed suicide, and a few days ago his daughter, a beau tiful and accomplished young lady, arriv ed in St. Louis for the purpose of taking the veil and devoting her life to religious seclusion. She prefers living at a dis tance from the scenes of her family mis fortunes, and in time will take the irrevo cable vows of —’Forney's Press. SALISBURY MARKETS JL'LY 11, 1S68. RF.POBTED BY BiNGHAM * CO., GBOCEKS. Bacon, per pound, 18 to 20 Coflee, per pounds 25 to 3U Corn, jier bnsb, ot 66 lbs*? •••••••••• 1.35 to 1 .38 “ Meal, bush. 46 *• 1.35 to 1,38 Copperas, per pound, 10 to (JO Candles, Tallow, “ •••••••••• 20 to 20 •‘ Adamantine, •••••••••• 25 to 00 Cptton, per pound. 16 to 16 “ ^ am, per bunch, 2.00 to 2.00 Eggs, per dozen. 12 to 15 Feathers, per pound. •••••••••• 40 to 50 FiOur, per sack. o.OU to 5 .50 Fish, Mackeral, *' i. 1. •••••••••• S25 .(X) “ “ 2. 90 to 22 “ “ 3. to Fruit, dried, apples pealed. to 4 unp’ld, 00 to 05 “ Peaches, pealed, • ••••«• ••• 10 to 12 “ “ “ unpealed. 5 to 6 Leather, upper, per pound, 62 to 75 •• sole, “ •••••••••• 33 to 35 Iron, bar, “ 8 to 10 “ castings, “ 8 to 10 Nails, cut, “ 6 to 7 Molasses, sorghum, per gal 50 “ We.st India, “ 60 to 00 “ Syrup. “ •••••••••• 1,00 to 1.20 Onions, per bushel. 50 to 75 Pork, per pound. 10 to 12 Potatoes, Irish, per bushel. 75 to 100 “ Sweet, “ 60 to 60 Sugar, Brown, per pound. 15 to 20 “ Clarified. “ »••••••••• 18 to 20 “ Crushed Pulverized 22 to 25 Salt, coast, per sack. •••••••••• 0.00 to 0.00 “ Liverpool, “ 3.00 to 3 .00 Table, •••••••••• B.50 to 6.(K) Tobacco, Leaf, per pound. 00 to 00 “ Manufactured, SO to 1 .50 " Smoking, 40 to 1.00 ducements will be ofl’ertd. Address all coiumnnicarion.s to WM. U. BERNARD, je‘27—w:tw:tf Wilmington, N. C. WILSON SCHOOL, MELVILLE, ALAMAXCE COUXTY. X C. FIIHE ne.xt Scx^ioti commences July 16, and continues 20 weeks. Board and Tuition $25 00 Each pupil will furnish 2 siieeis, 2 pillow ca ses and 1 blanket. For circular apply to the Principal. JOHN WILSON. Jk., v\25;3t1 Pnntipal. XhomusTille Female Colleg^e, THOMASVILLE, N. C. T he fall session of this institution will commence on Tuesday, the 4th of August, and coniiuue twenty weeks. Board : 810 per month, and other charg es proportionally low. SIXTY DOLLARS must be prepaid by each young lady on en tering, and tlie balance at the close of the term. The Faculty is full and composed of able and experienced Teachers. The course is extensive, embracing all the solid and onm- inental branches taught in other Female Colleges. The religious advantages are un surpassed. This College is located b»-t\veeu Salisbury and Greeusbori)’, in one .f the most beau tiful and healthy towns on the X. C. Central Railroad, and in two miles of the cele brated ‘Tleltou Chalybeate Springs.’’ And at the additional expense of 2.5 cents }»er day, any of the ••College girls” can have the constant use of the water. For Circulars, containing full particulars, address Rkv. D. K. BURTON, June 27-tw-\v-lm President. sp.'Arkling Catawba Springs, Proprietor. June 1. Catawba county, N C T kERXEBSVILLE HlliH SfilOOL, Male and Female, At Kemersville. Forsythe County. H. C. J. F. HEITMAN. A. B.. Principal. R. P. KERNER, Assistaiit ’’he Fall Se.vsi s will e.-mmercc July 29ih, and clc«se December 22d. TUITIOM. Spelling, Reading and Writing. $10 00 Arithmetic. Grammar, Gcoprap'-jy, / ... Hist or V and Philosupi.y, ^ ^ Higher M.“ithemaacs «!i; Ij,i;'.gnages, 20 OU Contingen; fee. 1 (.lO Tuition charged fn.Hi) tin,e of er,trance to close of session, except in cases ol p. .1 lcicJ sickness. Board can be bad at fiom >8 to $10 per month, exclusive of lights. Our object will be to make pnj.ii? -jh in what we undertake to teach /liem. For further parlictilars a»ldre« iLe Prmcipai at Kernersvihe. N. G. w25;tt CLEMMONS’ STAGE LINE! NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. EmigrankComing! L ands wanted, in Rowan, Davie, Da vidson, Iredell, Catawba, Stanly, Mecklen burg, Forsythe, &c. No title to be given till money is paid. Five per eent. commissions charged on all sales. Sell half your lands and the remainder will be worth double, and these thrifty Jersey farmers will develope our coun try. Send us descriptions of property, with prices, fec. Inquiries promptly answered. JOHN H. ENNISS, Salisbury, N. C., Agent for Van Syckels’ New Jersey laind Agency. ^ B. Gold Mines and ether mineral pro perties sold by special contract. J.H.E. Directors, Lewis C. Desmond, John D. Whitford, James M. Parrott. John D. Plan ner, Alonzo T. Jenkins, William Murdock, John L. Morehead, Isaac Ramsey; Proxv George W. Dill. ’ Wilmington and Weldon Hailroad. Di- I ot the doeti’iiiG ot secession there is rectors, Thomas D. Hogg, John Norfleet, Mai t‘'i-1 practical importance in the differ I Kidder; Pmxy ; A. A. McKoy. Union But! I * .1 *1 • ,,i ^orth Carohaa Hailroad.—Dir oeXors, 0. ence between the theories of the old G* Parsley, Josiah Turner. R. B. Haywood, , Whig and Democratic parties. We ! J. M. Coffin; Proxy, johii latcu all Its pledges to snocdilv re~! -n i i- i *1 i n ' Berrv. ,1 T- • , . ^ ” will publish the platlonn as finally; Western \orth Carolina Hailroad n* Store the Union, and has jiracticallv' • . . t ^ ■ n esrern .^ortn Carolina uaiiroad.-Di- declarcd tiiat it is disohed, he, in company with such men as Andrew Johnson, Chief Justice Chase, J. R, Doolittle, Udgar Cowan, Henry Edgeworth Female Seminary T his institution will be re-opened (*n the first day of September, with a full corps of Teachers. The entire ex- ! pense for a session of 20 weeks, of Tuition, with Board, Washing and contingent fee, will be according to the class: either $105, or $110, Warsliw to Fayetteville. Leave Warsaw for Fayett.?ville daily, ex cept Sunday. Through Tickets from Wil mington to Fayetteville, 83, Through Tick ets from AVeld-m, via War.^aw, to Fayetie- ville, 810. Through TickeUs from Golds boro’, via Warsaw, to Fayetteville, 86. Charlotte to Wadesboro’, Leave Charlotte, via M«»uroe. for Wades- boro’, Tuesday, Thursday and Staturday. Leave Wadesboro’ Sunday. Wednesday and Friday, after the arrival of the AVilming- ton, Charlotte & Rutherford Stage. MorrisTille to Pitt$boro’ Leave Morrisville for Pittsboro* Monday, Wednesday and Friday, return next days. Clemmons* Aceommodation Line. Between SALE.M and HIGH POINT, N. C., fare Ont Dollar. E. T. CLEMMOX.S, Contractor. July, 7, 18G3. [w-tw-lmj R. H. COWA.V A: CO., GENERAL COMMI.SSION AND 3|)iiititiig JRerctiants —AND— ^ebokisale (Sratfris, Agents for M. Davis t Son’s (Liberty Va..) Celebrated > irjrinia Chewing Tobacco. Agents for Lister Bro’s. Superph>'«t.hate of Lime. Agents for Vulcan Iron Works, Riclimoi.d, Va. I Wilmington.^ JV. C. JAS. H. HiLL. j junejT,w;tw;ly NO 32 NORTH WATER ST. promulgated by the Convention, to- A. S. Merrimon, Andrew J. Cowles, geti.er will, further coin.ne.tts, iu our s/ next. Pow ell ; Proxy. O. G. Ford. Albemarle and Chesopeakc Canal.—Direc for I tors, Peyton T. Henry, D. D. Ferebee, i The North British Review Stauberry, and nu.norous othors of! J™”‘‘J' like character and standing, has aban- Scott I ublulung Company, and completea their aeries of publications for the quarter just closed. This Review is a groat favorite with many readers * the editor has of late years shown good judg- doned that party and is now acting with the Democrats, and Conserva tives, The ticket seems to us to combine ! By Command of Bvt. Major-General Ed. R. S. Caxby : Louis V. Caziarc, Aid-dti-Camp. Actg. Asst. Adjt. Genl, New Orleans, July 7, P. M —-Theseats of seventeen Democratic members of the or $116 if paid in advance; or $116.50, or $121.50, or $126.50, if paid half in advance. Moderate extra charges will be made for an cient and modern Languages, Music, Drawing, and Oil Painting.—For circular! address. J. M. M. CALDWELL. July 9. (6t) Greensboro’ N. C. : Term 1868 —^—-— = ^— ; Thos. J. Coffey & Bro., i PLAIN TRUTH! [ Attachment. ^ ; Thos D Foxworth, et al ) X HOSE indebted to me are hereby notified .^’.tisfaction of tbe Court to call and settle by the 15th inst., or their ac- -Ti.omas D Foxworth re counts will be placed in the^hands of Wm. H. beyond tlio bi.mts of this State: It is or- Bailey, Esq-, for collection. J am in earnest. , ^ publication be made for six weeks JOHN H. ENNISS 1 m the v\ alchman A Old North State, nourying State of North Carolina, WATAUGA COUXTi'. The GRIFFITH Lands FOR SAI.F.. BY virliie of a ducr,-,-of the Conii \ Court of Rowan eoiiniY. will b,- a! she c,F,rt- house door in Salisbury, on Tnesuay. li*e 4lh day of August next, five h!intl.-T->l and jjine»y- live «cri»5 >/ In:,.} I> f/,r r—nf R. \V. (JriffiLli, dee d. S;;,.! lands are ;n the Wesiein part ut t .e uvuniy, witl.':, y-mcj iiiih-s of the depot at Rowan Mfil,'. and aro very valuable. A luriner de'er'q.Dt.u ot them !S thongiil to be un!.**c, ss.iry a.- !»,ey have Ls eu adve! ti.'fd beloie.—Tei :ii~ made known on tliO day if Sale. /' GKlFFJ’il, .\«i:nr. June 23. UC8. w2.”/.Ct LAND SAI,E. IN o’oedici.ce to an Older of the Couii ol Pleas and Quarter Ses.=ion5 for David son county, at May Term, lac's, we will sell at public auction, i-n the premises, tlie 4ili day ot August next, at 12 o’clock, m., on a credit of six inontiis, two Valuable Tracts of Land belonging to t'ne estate of Win. Owen. di*c'd. One tract cf 801) acre=, situated in tiie Jer>*-y Settteii’ent, celebrated Lt it.s ricn soil. The other, lying on the Yadkni River, containing 22u aeies—botli finely improveil and wel! wa tered. Persons de.'!r;r-g valuable real estate should attend. At the same time and place a quautity of Grain. 1 A. J. OWEN. J. II. SMITH, ) Lexington, N. C , Jane 23, . Adtti'is. 2 ,w 3t Ten Cents Reward. R AN AWAY fro’tt the suhscriher. on Thurs day, t’ne 2nd day of July, a bound boy named James Towel. I v..il pay the above reward of ten cents, and no t;.ank.«, to any f>erson who will return said bi.v to me, near South River Mills in Rowan C'luritv. W. W. MILLER. July 11, 1863. 2-;w3t State of North Carolina, STANLY COUNTY. Court of Equity. Spring Term, IStfS. I July 8, 1868. Druggist [tw-tf-370] all the elements of success, and we I fu the seleetion of subjects, and it ‘ the parish confidently predict its triumphant has ceased to be the organ of mere local election iu November next. interests. Of the eight articles in the and city of Orleans, are contested. They are not allowed a voice in the proceedings while the contest is pending. ^ OTICE is hereby given thiit sn applica tion will be made to tbe Legislature now in session, to amend tbe Charter of the Town oi Salisbury- July 7, 1868. tf-tw-370 Thomas Biles and wi.^e Elizabeth, et. al, vs. George M. Sides, et. at PETITION FOR Salk or t.KSV. T appearing to the .=aris:action of the Courl that the defendants, C. G. Melcbor, Wra. H. Melchor. Green M'd'on .-.nd wiff Caroline, Nel son Sides, Henry Marsfall and wifeSalhe, Car- olir.e Hearne, Harris Crowell and w ife Mary, and Anderson Porter and wife Polly, reside beyond the l;::i:t= of tljis J^tate: It ;? therefore ordered that publication be made for six weeks in the ’■ Watchman A Old North State,'* noti fying said defendants to be and apjK-ar at our r'oi/e/;/-i J c ■ 4 1 next Sjr»erior Court of Law. tv be held for the i Court ofPUaaandQuartrr Session, Afril cc.urt-l.o,:M m Albe- marie, on the \st Monday in September next, tiien and li.ere to show cause if any. why the lands mentioned in the Petition shall not be sold. Witness, Jas. D. Hearne, clerk of onr said Court at office, the 1st Monday ia March, 1868. J. D. Hearse, c.m.e. 23:6f:$8. Just Received.—^uSAt^y of Spirits Turpentine, Linseed Oil, White Aud Paint of all colors, at G. B. PCULSON A CO’S Dcag Store Wyatt’s Old Stand, nay23—twSriwflt Salisbury, N. C JOB PBlNimCi Executed al thu Office. I said defendant to be A appear at our next Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions to be held for Ihe county of Watauga at the court-house in Boone, on the 2nd Monday in July next, and j then and there shew cause if any be has, why the property levied on sliall not be condemned to the use of the plaintifis. Witness, J. B. Todd, clerk of our said court at oflice, the 3d Monday in April, 1868. J. B. TODD, Clerk pr adr $8 00—1»
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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July 11, 1868, edition 1
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